Stutelberg v. State

741 N.W.2d 867, 2007 Minn. LEXIS 751, 2007 WL 4259532
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedDecember 6, 2007
DocketA07-383
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 741 N.W.2d 867 (Stutelberg v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stutelberg v. State, 741 N.W.2d 867, 2007 Minn. LEXIS 751, 2007 WL 4259532 (Mich. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

BARRY G. ANDERSON, Justice.

Appellant Mark Alan Stutelberg was convicted in 1994 of two counts of first-degree murder for the killing of his girlfriend, Holly Schwerzler. On March 30, 2006, appellant filed a petition for postcon-viction relief and a motion for an evidentia-ry hearing. The district court summarily denied appellant’s petition and motion, concluding that his delay in seeking relief constituted an abuse of judicial process and that the newly discovered evidence he proffers prejudices the State. We reverse the district court’s summary denial of appellant’s petition and motion and remand for an evidentiary hearing.

The relationship of appellant and Holly Schwerzler began during the summer of 1980. In 1981, appellant was convicted of murder for killing a drug dealer in the course of a robbery. 1 Schwerzler participated in the crime, but, in connection with a plea bargain, she pleaded guilty to aggravated robbery in exchange for testifying against appellant. After appellant’s release from prison in 1989, the couple lived together with their son, M.S., in Cor-coran, Minnesota. They later moved to Osseo, Hennepin County, where they were living at the time of Schwerzler’s disappearance.

Appellant verbally threatened Schwer-zler’s life on multiple occasions, and M.S. testified that appellant physically abused *869 Schwerzler approximately once a month when they lived together. Many of these incidents of abuse involved appellant attempting to strangle Schwerzler and pulling telephones out of the walls in their Osseo home to prevent her from seeking help. A particularly violent episode occurred in June 1992, a little over two months before Schwerzler’s disappearance, in which appellant attempted to strangle and vigorously kicked Schwerzler. In a note she wrote to a coworker, Schwerzler stated that appellant “about killed me this time.” Between the June 1992 incident of abuse and Schwerzler’s disappearance, Schwerzler lived in the house in Osseo and appellant lived in the adjacent garage.

Schwerzler resolved to end her relationship with appellant in the weeks before her disappearance. In August 1992, she confided in a coworker that appellant was in. possession of a trailer that did not belong to him and that she planned to notify the police/ She worried, however, that appellant “would kill her * * , * before he would go back to jail.” After appellant attempted to strangle M.S. in the week prior to Schwerzler’s disappearance, Schwerzler left M.S. with another family and became even more determined to end the relationship. On Saturday, August 29, -the police executed a search warrant for evidence of appellant’s theft of the trailer, thoroughly rummaging through the house and garage in the course of their search. Later that day, Schwerzler told the police what she knew about the trailer and returned home against the officers’ warnings. Until appellant spoke to the police on Monday, August 31, he was unaware that the police had executed a search warrant and instead believed that Schwerzler had broken into the garage.

In a phone conversation on Saturday evening, Schwerzler told her mother that she was packing her belongings. At approximately 4 a.m. on Sunday, August 30, Schwerzler’s next-door neighbor woke up, and, looking out her bathroom window, she noticed a man of appellant’s height and build in Schwerzler’s bedroom. The neighbor went back to sleep but woke up shortly thereafter and saw the man, who also had “the same walk” as appellant, place a bag into a car. After dozing off again, the neighbor woke up and saw the man turn off the light in Schwerzler’s bedroom. She watched the man enter the garage, heard the clinking sound of a chain being picked up, and saw him place something into the car. The man retrieved a briefcase from the house and drove away in the car at 5 a.m. The neighbor testified that she had “no doubt” that appellant was the man she saw that morning.

Family members became concerned when Schwerzler failed to appear at a family gathering on Sunday. They visited the house in Osseo that day and found phones ripped out of the walls, packed boxes scattered about the house, and a broken table. The state of the phones was particularly alarming given appellant’s practice of ripping phones out of the walls during his abuse of Schwerzler. The family members also observed that Schwerzler’s bed was covered with only a mattress pad and a crumpled sheet. An officer had seen a comforter on the bed when he searched the house on August 29.

Schwerzler’s family returned to the house over the next two days and found that someone had attempted to repair the phone wires and removed many of the boxes and the broken table. They also found Schwerzler’s makeup bag, which she took with her whenever she left home. On Monday, August 31, they found a pile of appellant’s clothes in the basement and a pair of jeans and a shirt in the washing machine, and the next day they found Schwerzler’s quilt in the dryer. A picture *870 of the interior of the garage taken by one of Schwerzler’s sisters on Tuesday shows a blanket on the floor underneath Schwer-zler’s comb, an unopened pack of cigarettes, and the dining room telephone. The garage was uncharacteristically clean and had a damp spot on the floor as if it had been washed. Appellant was arrested on Tuesday, September 1, for a parole violation. 2 He repeatedly contradicted himself in his explanations to Schwerzler’s family members and to the police regarding his activities on the weekend of Schwerzler’s disappearance, when he last saw Schwerzler, and the whereabouts of his truck and Schwerzler’s car during that time. 3

On October 1, 1992, a hunter discovered Schwerzler’s body wrapped in a sheet and placed under tree branches in a wooded area in Vasa Township, Goodhue County. Schwerzler’s robe, which she wore before and after her showers, was pushed partially behind her, and pieces of her clothing were tied around her neck, wrists, and ankles. An autopsy revealed that the cause of Schwerzler’s death was “homicidal strangulation” and that she was already dead when the ligatures around her wrists and ankles were attached.

A number of items found near Schwer-zler’s body came from the house in Osseo. M.S. identified an iron, a set of weights tied together, and a dumbbell found near the body as items from the house. A small Dirt Devil vacuum cleaner and a trouble light were also found near the body, and M.S. testified. that a Dirt Devil vacuum was kept in the house and that appellant had a trouble light in the garage. A chain was found near the body as well. Expert testimony at trial connected, to varying degrees of certainty, (1) a concrete block found near Schwerzler’s body with one in the garage; (2) debris found in Schwer-zler’s car with those concrete blocks; (3) grease on the concrete block found near the body with appellant’s grease gun; (4) the weights found near the body with weights in the house in Osseo; and (5) markings on the concrete block found near the body with a scratch on appellant’s grease gun. Observing that most of the items found near Schwerzler’s body are heavy, the State speculated that appellant intended to submerge the body but found the nearby creek too difficult to reach or the water level too low.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
741 N.W.2d 867, 2007 Minn. LEXIS 751, 2007 WL 4259532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stutelberg-v-state-minn-2007.